Serving Fargo–Moorhead & rural Cass / Clay County · 24/7 emergency response for backups and frozen systems
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Serving Rural Clay County, MN — Clay County

Septic services across rural Clay County

From the river townships east toward Hawley and Barnesville country, rural Clay County manages its wastewater one system at a time. Pumping, Minnesota SSTS compliance work, repairs, and replacements — all of it reaches the Minnesota side.

Clay County stretches across a soil transition that matters for septic owners: heavy lakebed clay near the river giving way to the sandier beach ridges of glacial Lake Agassiz as you head east. Where your property sits on that gradient shaped what kind of system it has — and what it takes to keep it healthy. River-side clay systems need the strict pumping discipline of the valley floor; beach-ridge systems drain easier but still live or die by what reaches the field.

Minnesota's SSTS program is the regulatory backdrop for everything on this side: certified designs for new systems, licensed maintenance, and the compliance inspections that Clay County commonly requires when property transfers. For owners, the practical advice is simple — know your system's compliance status before you need to know it. Estate transitions, sales, and major remodels all go smoother when the septic question is already answered.

Every septic service, one call

Wondering what a pump-out should cost? Thecost & frequency guide lays out the real numbers for the Fargo–Moorhead area — tank sizes, price ranges, and how often to pump. No email required, no games.

Cold-weather note: once the ground freezes, routine pump-outs get harder to schedule and risers buried under snow take longer to access. If your tank is due, book before freeze-up — and if a line or tank has already frozen, that's an emergency call, not a wait-until-spring problem.

Frequently asked questions

Which parts of rural Clay County do you cover?

The townships around Moorhead, Dilworth, Glyndon, and Sabin are core service area, with Hawley-area acreages reachable by arrangement. If you're farther east toward the lakes, ask — routes flex with the season, and the answer is a thirty-second phone call.

When does a Clay County septic system need a compliance inspection?

Most commonly at property transfer — Clay County generally expects one when a home with a septic system sells. Other triggers can include permits for remodels or additions that change bedroom count. Rules and specifics live with the county, so confirm your situation — but if a transaction is coming, assume you'll need one and schedule early.

Need septic service in Rural Clay County?

Call for straight answers and a firm quote — or send the form and we'll get back to you same day.

Call (701) 419-0184
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